55

I'm using TortoiseSVN and I want to do a Checkout of an existing repository into a local directory. However, I only want to pull down certain portions of the file tree. Is there a way I can do that?

For instance:

/trunk
    /project-A
    /project-B
    /project-C

Let's say I just want to pull down trunk, project-A and project-B. How do I do that?

5 Answers 5

82

It looks like you were successful but I wanted to include a step-by-step guide in the hopes that it is helpful to others.

  1. Checkout trunk into a working copy with depth = "Only this item"
  2. Open working copy
  3. Go to repo browser from the working copy
  4. Select your desired project subfolder(s), right-click and select "Update item to revision"

This will pull only the subfolder(s) you've selected into your working copy.

2
  • Hello. How can I stop "tracing" one of folders? I checkout whole trunk (many projects) and selected only few. But I don't need copy of one of those projects locally. How to "remove" it?
    – Hooch
    Commented Nov 21, 2014 at 13:05
  • 5
    Command line users can use these commands: svn co <URL> <localRootFolder> --depth empty svn up <localRootFolder>/project-A svn up <localRootFolder>/project-B svn up <localRootFolder>/project-C Commented Jul 26, 2017 at 9:40
51

This may be coming late, but for anyone finding this question and wondering if you could exclude existing directories: there appears to be a way to do so.

  1. Right click on the directory you want to exclude
  2. TortoiseSVN -> Update To Revision...
  3. From the Update Depth drop-down box select Exclude and press OK

That should delete the directory if it doesn't have any local mods and exclude it from further updates. If you ever need the directory back, use Michael Hackner's method above.

2
  • If I want to simulate above steps using svn command line, how can I do it? Commented Oct 19, 2016 at 10:55
  • 1
    @ArindamRoychowdhury: $ svn update --set-depth exclude <target folder>, just in case it's still on your mind ;)
    – eff
    Commented Jan 18, 2019 at 17:58
11

Expanding on autonomy's answer from above ...

If you have checked out a whole project and later want to exclude certain folders or files from it....

  1. Right click on the parent directory that contains the dir/file you want to exclude
  2. TortoiseSVN -> Update To Revision...
  3. From the Update Depth drop-down box select Exclude and the click on "Choose items..." and
    • select the items you want to keep
    • and deselect the items you want to exclude
    • then press OK & OK again

That should delete the directories/files you have deselected and exclude them from further updates. If you ever need the directory back, repeat the process and change your selection.

2
  • When you come back from selecting folders to keep/not keep, the Update Depth drop.-down has changed to Custom Depth. Do NOT change to Exclude again, just press OK. If you change it to Exclude, TortoiseSVN thinks that you want to exclude the parent folder which will fail. Commented Oct 10, 2017 at 9:49
  • What if I want to check out one previously excluded item and keep (but not update) all the others? Commented Feb 8, 2018 at 10:05
4

If you go into the project-A folder and right-click==>SVN Update, it will only update the project-A folder and it's subfolders. Then you can do the same for project-B

3
  • 1
    This is before I've even pulled it down once. Do I just create the trunk directory locally, then go in there, create the project-A folder, and then do a checkout of that project into that folder? Commented Nov 3, 2009 at 15:26
  • Answering myself: yes, I had to create the trunk folder, do a checkout of trunk to this folder ("only this item"), then go into that folder, go to the Repo Browser and pull down the projects and files I wanted. Commented Nov 3, 2009 at 15:32
  • Yeah you never have to pull down an entire project. From the Repo Browser, you can pull down whatever folders you want. Commented Nov 3, 2009 at 15:57
3

This works as well:

  1. Right click > Select SVN Checkout
  2. Select "Choose items..."
  3. Select the subfolders/items you want [1]

[1] - Do note that if you checkout subfolders partially (without all the items inside that subfolder), and files are subsequently added to that subfolder and committed, you will not get them when you perform a regular checkout.

This question is related to Can you do a partial checkout with Subversion? but with a particular context of using TortoiseSVN.

1
  • That first option doesn't exist when you've already checked-out anything on that parent folder. That's precisely why the question was asked. Commented Nov 14, 2019 at 8:52

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